Showing posts with label Sherwood Country Club. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sherwood Country Club. Show all posts

12/06/2013

Zach leads Two Mac's

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Rory McIlroy, with girlfriend Caroline Wozniacki following him at the Northwestern Mutual World Challenge, was hopeful of building momentum from his win last week in the Australian Open. But he missed a few short putts, found the water on the par-3 15th and had a 73 in the end.

His playing partner and defending champion Graeme McDowell, who had a 72.

McDowell saw a note that his last eight rounds at Sherwood were in the 60s. That streak ended Thursday, though for good reason.

"The course hasn't been this tough in a couple years," McDowell said. "The scoring reflects that. The greens are much firmer. The speed of them caught me by surprise a little bit today. My speed was a little clumsy, and it showed today on the greens."

Zach Johnson already is looking ahead to next year, and one of his priorities is to score better on the par 5s. He got started on that Thursday in the Northwestern Mutual World Challenge.

Johnson birdied four of the five par 5s on a chilly afternoon at Sherwood Country Club, sending him to a 5-under 67 and a one-shot lead over Matt Kuchar. They were among only five players in the elite 18-man field who broke par.

One of them was tournament host Tiger Woods, who had a new driver in the bag and missed only two fairways. The problem was his putter. Woods opened his round by missing a short par putt, and he finished it by missing a 4-foot birdie putt on the 18th. He wound up with a 71.

Kuchar played with Woods -- they were partners at The Presidents Cup -- and hit his approach into 2 feet for birdie on the final hole.

Hunter Mahan and Bubba Watson were at 70. They are among seven players who have yet to win a tournament anywhere in the world this year, even though all 18 players in the World Challenge are in the top 30 in the world ranking.

The tournament counts toward the ranking, though everything else about it is unofficial. For some players, it's a time to shake off some rust and test new equipment. For others, it's the end of a long year.

Johnson had his annual "summit" with his team of coaches at the start of the week. They go over the year, crunch statistics and lay out goals for where to improve in 2014. One of the areas was par-5 scoring.

"A highlight that we're looking into next year is trying to play those holes a little bit better," Johnson said. "(Today,) I hit it close. I had good shots in there with the proper spin, nothing more than that. But you've got to take advantage of them. You've got five of them. The thing is ... one errant shot, you're staring a 6 right in the face, if not more. There's a lot of penal areas."

There was plenty of punishment for some players in the field.

Steve Stricker was among those under par until a bogey-bogey-double bogey finish put him at 75. Jordan Spieth, coming off a sensational rookie season and playing for the first time since the HSBC Champions in Shanghai a month ago, had a 77 and was last in the field. Jason Day, who won the individual and team titles at the ISPS Handa World Cup of Golf two weeks ago at Royal Melbourne, had a 76.

This is the final year the tournament is being played at Sherwood. It moves to Isleworth just outside Orlando, Florida, next year.

Woods has played only one tournament since The Presidents Cup, and that was a tie for third in the Turkish Open. He said he struggled with his irons -- even though he missed only two fairways, he hit just 12 greens -- and couldn't get enough putts to fall.

"I made a few mistakes today," Woods said. "I also hit a couple of good shots that ended up in some interesting spots. That can happen out there. I shot about the score ... maybe could have gotten one or two more out of it."

Johnson had few complaints. He opened with two birdies, and then surged ahead on the back nine with five birdies in a seven-hole stretch, three of them on the par 5s. Johnson has a pair of runner-up finishes at this event, and with the tournament moving, this is his last shot at Sherwood.

"I did everything decent," he said. "Just a real solid day all around. I was aggressive when I needed to be aggressive, and I was conservative when I needed to be conservative. It's nothing more than a decent start."

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12/05/2013

Rory Ready for Woods

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Rory McIlroy plays one last tournament the Northwestern Mutual World Challenge hosted by Tiger Woods this week. The last event before in what has been a largely frustrating 2013 campaign.

But a win last Sunday at the Emirates Australian Open has given him the flavour of success once again and no doubt he would like to sign off on a triumphant note at Sherwood Country Club.

"I'm happy this is the last event of the year," McIlroy told reporters, "It will be nice to have a few weeks off.

"This last part of the season was all about trying to build momentum going into 2014, and I feel like for the most part I've done that.

"A couple of good finishes in Asia and I got a win in Australia. I'd love to get myself in the mix this week and finish the season off on a really high note."

Although McIlroy was delighted to end his title drought with a one-shot victory over Adam Scott at Royal Sunday Golf Club, he never felt he needed that win.

"Did I need the win? Probably not," McIlroy said. "Was it nice to get the win? Of course. But I felt like I saw enough good golf in there to know that it was very close, and it wasn't going to be long before I did win.

"Regardless of the results, I knew that my game was coming around, and that was the most important thing. What I was happy with the most was the limited amount of times that I have gotten in contention this year, I have played well.

"I have played well down the stretch. I've played well under pressure, and that is something that I really have improved on the last few years."

"I'm very hard on myself," said the 24-year-old, who clinched his second major title by a record eight shots at last year's PGA Championship.

"I feel like I'm emotionally connected to my golf game in terms of, if I play bad, I'll be in a bad mood. If I play well, I'll be in a good mood. The way I play golf shouldn't determine who I am as a person.

"That's sort of carried through not just in my golf game, it's just how I am, my demeanour and everything. That's something I feel like I've gotten better at and something I need to continue to get better at."

Asked if he was prepared for Thursday's opening round at Sherwood, McIlroy smiled: "Yeah, I'm in a great mood. I'm happy."



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12/02/2013

Tiger Awaits Two Mac's

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Even with the PGA TOUR starting a new season in October, and big golf being played around the world, Tiger Woods said he was pleasantly surprised to draw another big cast of stars to his holiday tournament in California.

"It's our deepest and strongest field that we've had, possibly ever," Woods said.

The World Challenge has not announced its two sponsor exemptions from among the top 50 in the world ranking to fill out the 18-man field. The tournament, which was in jeopardy this summer until Northwestern Mutual stepped in as a title sponsor, will be held December 5-8 at Sherwood Country Club.

It includes defending champion Graeme McDowell, along with three other Europeans who will be competing in Asia for the Race to Dubai in the weeks leading up to Woods' event. Rory McIlroy, Lee Westwood and Ian Poulter are expected to play.

Ernie Els is playing the World Challenge for the first time. Jason Day returns, though the Australian is making a rare trip Down Under this year to compete in World Cup at Royal Melbourne just two weeks before Woods' tournament.

The other Americans besides Woods are PGA champion Jason Dufner, Matt Kuchar, Hunter Mahan, Brandt Snedeker, Zach Johnson, Bubba Watson, Jim Furyk, Keegan Bradley and Steve Stricker.

"I think we're all very surprised that we've got as many international players playing this year," Woods said during a conference call. "The American players have supported our event throughout the years. Obviously, it's easier travel if you're based in the States. The guys who are playing in the Race to Dubai, it's a bit more of a challenge to get them to play. But for some reason, this year we've had guys wanting to play and we have probably the best field we've had."

The tournament will be played for the 15th time, and it means so much to Woods that last year he invested his own money -- believed to be about $4 million -- to help cover operating expenses and to make sure there would be enough proceeds to benefit his foundation.

One challenge this year was the new wraparound season on the PGA TOUR, starting in October and ending with the TOUR Championship by Coca-Cola next September. There are six tournaments the rest of this fall -- two in Asia -- that offer full FedExCup points and official money.

Woods' tournament is not official. It counts only toward the world ranking. And the total purse ($3.5 million) is smaller than any tournament on the PGA TOUR or European Tour for the rest of 2013. That didn't seem to matter.

"I think word has spread," Woods said. "We've always treated players well there. They've had a great time. It's close enough to the following year where some of the guys want to try and experiment with a few things equipment-wise, club deal. They want to get a tournament in before they play Kapalua, the Hawaiian Open. Some of the guys have done that in the past.

"Otherwise, we've had great American support," Woods said. "But it's pretty incredible to get the international support we've gotten this year."

Woods has only two tournaments remaining in 2013 -- Turkey and the World Challenge.

Since the FedExCup began in 2007, the only domestic event he has played after September was the Frys.com Open in 2011, the year he missed the FedExCup Playoffs because of injury.

Woods still hasn't adjusted to the notion that a new season already is underway.

"Some of the players were talking about that at The Presidents Cup," he said. "It's hard to believe the very next week is a tour event. We felt like we were still playing our season because we were still playing The Presidents Cup. I think it's going to take a little bit of time to get accustomed to it."



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